Jakarta Globe – AFP, Sajjad Tarakzai, January 12, 2014
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| An undated family handout photo released on Jan. 10, 2014, shows Pakistani student Aitzaz Hassan, who was killed in a suicide attack outside his school in Hangu district. (AFP Photo) |
A Pakistani
teenager who sacrificed his life to stop a suicide bomber, saving the lives of
hundreds of students, has been honored with the country’s highest award for
bravery.
Aitzaz
Hassan, 15, a student in Hangu district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, has
become a national hero after tackling the bomber who came to attack his school
on Monday while hundreds of students were inside.
Hassan died
in hospital after the bomber blew himself up at the school gates. No one else
was wounded or killed in the incident.
The office
of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said it had advised President Mamnoon
Hussain “to approve the conferment of Sitara-e-Shujjat (star of bravery) to Shaheed
(martyred) Aitzaz Hassan.
“Shaheed
[martyred] Aitzaz’s brave act saved the lives of hundreds of students and
established a sterling example of gallantry and patriotism,” it said in a
statement issued late Friday.
An official
from the Prime Minister’s house told AFP on Saturday that Hassan’s family is
expected to receive the posthumous award on March 23, Pakistan’s national day,
following the president’s ceremonial approval.
News of
Hassan’s act led to an outpouring of tributes on social media.
Pakistani
newspapers, TV channels and social media sites had demanded recognition for
Hassan’s bravery, calling him a hero who should receive the nation’s highest
award.
Locals from
Hassan’s village, Ibrahimzai in Hangu district, and Pakistan army officers laid
floral wreaths on his grave on Saturday as relatives looked on and wept.
Students
held a vigil and carried placards condemning the killing and terrorism.
A military
statement on Saturday said Brigadier Nadeem Zaki Manj, local commander in
Hangu, visited Hassan’s grave and laid a floral wreath on behalf of General
Raheel Sharif, the head of Pakistan’s army.
The
commander also conveyed Sharif’s “rich tributes to the bereaved family on the
bravery and sacrifice” of their son, the statement added.
“The Nation
is proud of this young Hero who has set a sterling example of bravery and
sacrifice… he has sacrificed his today for our better tomorrow,” the army chief
said in a message for Hassan’s father.
Hundreds of
fellow students prayed for Hassan in the morning school assembly.
Shahban
Mahdi, a classmate of Hassan, told AFP: “I am proud of what he did. I owe my
life to him – had it not been for Aitzaz Hassan, none of us would be alive.”
Habib Ali,
one of Hassan’s teachers, added: “His classmates miss him…but they promise they
will not forget him always and will keep his memory alive. And we say to all
terrorists: you cannot stop us and we will keep on studying.”
Pakistani
schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, who survived being shot in the head by the Taliban
for championing girls’ right to education, paid tribute to the teenager on
Friday, describing him as “brave and courageous”.
“In
sacrificing his own life, Aitzaz protected hundreds of innocent young students
from being killed,” she said in a statement.
“I wish
that in giving his own life he helps to bring peace to my people and my
country,” she said.
Malala, who
was last year nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, also called for the
government to award Hassan its “highest national award”.
“His
bravery must never be forgotten,” she said.
Hassan’s
father Mujahid Ali Bangash, 55, told AFP on Thursday he felt not sadness but
pride at his son’s death.
“Aitzaz has
made us proud by valiantly intercepting the bomber and saving the lives of
hundreds of his fellow students,” he said.
“I am happy
that my son has become a martyr by sacrificing his life for a noble cause.”
Bangash
works in the UAE and was only able to reach Ibrahimzai village, which lies in
an area of Hangu dominated by minority Shiite Muslims, the day after his son’s
funeral.
Police
official Shakirullah Bangash told AFP on Thursday that Aitzaz intercepted the
bomber 150 meters away from the main gate of the school, which has around 1,000
students.
Agence France-Presse
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